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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-08-05, Page 2: N'IOT` R OF:.FOR CHILDREN DIES IN TORONTO AFFER DRIN L!QU R it ... s Toronto. --With the death of Mrs. Melia Street home of Mrs'. Fanny Irene Coleenik, aged 30, of 6 Shipman Shulinen, who is charged with man the iolice and Grown author- slaughter in connection with Atldn troet 1son's death, are inclined to the belief it}es are of the the .opinion, that -another that the lamas which supposedly killed victim of alcohol poisoning has been Mrs. Coleseik was obtained there. No lidded to the already longdeltth list. The bgdy Was removed to the Morgue, where an autopsy was held to ascer- tain the cause of death. Acting Gleef from five to threes° years. Coroner Crawford is in'ves'tigating. age r`o Dr, Fnrh, ' pathologist, carried' the wo- After the inaction of the Teat three esan's stomach' away for analysis., days, alleged bootleggers began totbe Mrs. Colesnik'works out by the day. again gathered into the torts b y he li locallice. Richard `Wiser, Gerrard Wednesday she returned home, feeling P° very sick, and went_ to bed: As the Streett west, and. George Fortress, Ed - day day ro reared, she became worse. A I ward Street, were arrested by Plait doctor was .stied, but on hie arrival cloehesmen 'Jackson'. and Laker the wohxan was' found to be dead. From the symptoms displayed by the woman it is thought that .-alcohelic poisoning Was bhe cause of her death, The ,Colesnik home is situated within a short distance of the Atkin- son domicile, 59 McMurray Avenue, the head of which died in St. Joseph's : Hospital Tuesday last, presumably of alcoholic poisoning. When neWs of the woman's death was received al vagrancy. The officer claims to heve Keele Street Station, tation Detectives Chis- witnessed the two men ou Church Icahn and McMasterwere ordered to Street drinkingrubbing alcohol from rvenalga te. They learned that Mrs. a bottle, which they dilute d b y me an s Colesnic had drunk -some alcohol last of water imbibed frein a horse trough. Sunday. . Her husband had partaken of the liquor also. He did not know, h stated,the source of the liquor, al - alcohol weds -found fn the Colesnxk Immo. The dead woman io survived by her husband and four children, ranging in West Dundas Station,. on charges of violating the 0':T,A, The officers' Maim tolxave found two small bottles of alcohol in searching the houios of the pair. One of these was hidden in a sewing machine. Janes Murphy, no horse, and Harry Reid, King Street east, were taken into custody by P. C. ' Hamilton of West Dundas Station on a charge of EXPLOSION` A L f �OSHAWA; K.Iill -TWO iWt RKERS • Anotheri min, charged with being; drunk, was .brought into West Dun- dee; dos Station and when he was searched thou h police, owing to the prox- a partially filled' bottle of alcohol was g the imity of the Colesnik home to the found on him. CANADIAN CROP TO DOMINATE MARKET Wheat HarvestWill Deter- mine Price, Says American Bank Review. New York.—"The woad price of wheat in the corning season will 'de- pend to an unusual degree upon the outturn of the Canadian crop, says the National Bank of Commerce. world a review of the outlook for wheat supplies appearing in the Aug- erst number of Commerce Monthly, the hank says: "Unless Canada's crop B dies, Thrown Distance of Fifty` Feet When ;Gasoline Tan Was Being,;Repaired. Oshawa.—Two workmen were kill- ed, ono seriously injured. and 'auotleer received minor injuries when a huge • gasoline tank having a' capacity of 14,000 gallons exploded while it whs• undergoing repairs, during which' Mu acetylene torcb was used. THE DEAD. Fred GGaukel,' aged 28, of Harmony. Alexander McNabb, aged' 38, 804 Golf Street, SERIOUSLY INJURED.._-,. George Sanders, 520 Simcoe Street South, plumber. MINOR INJURIES, Rev. F. H. Cosgrave, E.D. -Harold Godfre 808' Nassau Street,- Is a graduate of Trinity College, Bub - line Y, alin who has beenObasen .provost and water boy, aged 15, f ince-.chancellor of Trinity of Trinity The tragedy occurred at the site o ITev.' O: the new Pontiae_plant, where the gas°- College, Tmatnto, to succeed: line tank Was being settled. ` it eon- A. Sesger,131shep-Eleot of the Diocese` twined no :gasoline, but was half filled of Ontario. with water However, when- the _.� MEN CHARGED WITH l MANSE JGR Arrested in Connection With Poison Liquor Fatalities. Toronto. --Police tightened up an- aurred ran for his life, escape other 'link in the chain of evidence minor injuries. At present he is in surrounding the distribution o poison , the hospital. liquor, they. say, when Max Wurtzman, and Edgar Kellar, 230 Beverley Street, and Henry Gold, Albert Parkes g stein, 124 Huron Street, were arrest- two riggers, escaped with nothing ed byDetectives Waterhouse and more than a severe shaking up. They did net require medical attention. Winters' The huge tank had been carefully The two men are held on :charges out to remove' any gas that of rnarrelaughtsr. Bail was refused pumped i xriight remain, and, following this, JOAN€ IN RADA AS CAI1 acetylene torchwas applied to weld • e, 'certain spot 'there were evidently LAST VJCTIM TAKEN. . sufficient fumes inthe tank to•cause FROM ' BALSAM LAKE it to explode. Five men ' were .at _ work about the tank, and a water boy„ a, the progress Week, was• standing watching s Quest Ends With Re- d the acetylene welder. .every of -Remains of 'Eleven Alexander McNabb, the welder, and IrMUM Fred Gaukel, a rigger, were instantly - ed ' F nelon Falls. -Balsam Lake has ' killed: Their bodies were'shatie� e and torn, and were hurled through the given up the Last of its dead'. ` aged air_a distance of slim60 efeet. The 'body of .Harold Bakerell g , George Saunders, a plumber, who 19, of 445 Oakwood avenue, Toronto,. had previously put compressed air in the 'hast of the eleven victims who teat the tank, was hurled s'evei ahs feet. Ile their linea nine days ago, was recover was rushed to the hospital, where ed early on Thursdzy. The remains medical attention was rendered. ' It were floating and had drifted Mese to is thought that he will recover. Har- Long Point, whence the .ill-fated crew Natural Resources Bulletin.. 7nxieliitly associated with ,the' eairielr ij periods. of Canadian hietory, fie re IC11llE ,yourcaa: nxcartt a rank preen 11116 9 torsi aeiets of -the inlmea.- Nass a Bahamas --More than 150 with which the majority of the ,150'b ratewhimgber'.taheesla suggested' egesecho le Y �'r sons . ere rnissing: t. aoesons were believed drowned,ively-dam- pe' y the age estimated conservatively � at �t8,- The line of boats filed out of NAS: ��dd'Cile gtvFl°ls•er fiver a,tt5roabfor Yur porthon at . heading for the famous 000,000 was were k and more than.eau Friday, • destroyed,bo- tette; lyelig beside the submerged of the torrittrry now embraced wi+,Ir13i twesn is were s g o; nights" v ^the western rim of Andros: the' Dominions sand ter .atsvaaranin--_ midni , Monday et'and Tuesday .bent f. ,'of the Be- tales the fur trade ployet tinkles midnight latheinst'de Nassau bur- Island, the tai=gest Isle o role in shaping political.: an well as. ric Bahaism recorded in Nassau and' the. }camas. ` economi0 development. With the cam - Bahama: Islands, • When the storm had abated early of the settler, the Iumiierman and '. the dam- .Wednesday Teeming three small fish- lag Miner, t ..Eur l far -trader ensenlag, Nassau sto the brunt of the *e a the etorm which ribbe noutS n, fro smacks y th tl u in the herbal: .,ince lost' his commercial pre-emiui E' Uhat `Sunday numbered a alae castors avar the Caribbean tire from anal ray encu, but •Canada is 811th, consgrtChOils wrstish ;havoc through the entire approximately sixty craft, ranging among ft-Card1ng countries, fr from the .insignificant offshore sail British group s. to the 89ston yacht Isoceles. Several oenturiea of ocnstanf ex - her boats to be Sir plolt titles have not undermined the. so- Wfth many .families homeless glass a.n mnsssesitf de. r s-, l public The I s Lipton's was believed pada), of Canada's 'stock of fpr -bear - glass and .masses of debris, all public. Thomas teases -American g:unimale to ylelrti.a:hoaiLing contri- utilities paralyzed, Nassau -abandoned cup challenger. The Shamrock IV now ing a to male world's elhadlenxeen rl- efforts for alleviation of.her own prti- lies undereforty feet of weber. • i in Curs of eheewor 'estop. Tho toe • ful condition to despatch sill available The eastern , corner of Nessa , mens wreathed: lei rLboriss of the t o - craft .in':search`:of the picturesque the old fort Montagu section, was minion wremted:•tebitorof ite Of ee to four feet of sponge fleet, numbering between. era, f3 ter, e&withresembling g ill race. sniiixals, in; abur_dance and exceptieual 200ng small shoo s and sehoaners, water, nasambling 'a m and P ., - diversity';' Eyed 'provinve ehares anti- _ etantially Ln the 'returns dorivse from fur'resourecs,, .a,s. s.ari.crs•1 and the Northwest Ter-:. ritories, comprisiist an area of approxi- mately' ].,200,000! s'guare iuiles, is- a, re• esrvoim from whioh, undar wise aneth- , ode of exploitation, a valuable annual catch may be taken in perpetuity., The: reedit:is wel'1 maintained from year to Year and our exports total about'_ 18 million dollars annually Thio boaver lethe,inose renowned. Canadian . fiir•bearer, although the ., muskrat ,is taken in mucin greater am- bers and vies with the former In value ot annual yield. alaeten, mink, :fax, flther, otter and, ermine are trapped, in Targe slumbers, and the range of fur resourees incl'udea 'many less 'pre-'.. infant. specie's: Notable development In recent years lies been achieved• bg live fur farming industry ' Canada, and mane particc- tarty the province. of Prince Edward telend—:has beeit - pioneer in respeot of this industry. The successful •do - mastication of ,the silver •fox, and- the well a&vanced experiments with. mink, .karakul -sheep, ohlnchll'Ia rabbit and other fur-beareile of high pelt value, have introduced: a new and profitable, branch, of animal husbeadxy which has already reached an investment of many million dollars. thick fats f.o.b., $12,50; select prem - rum $2,6d. MONTREAL.- , --TORONTO. 'Oats -=Can. West., No. 2, .60% to ,' 80atic; do, No. 3 56y,tc. Flour—Ma,,N, Man, whoh.,-1.6 ; No.orth meg; Spring wheat pats., firsts;., $9; seconds, $1,2 North., $1.0II; 3 North., $8.50; strong- bakers, $8.80; whiter, $1.68, notrihxal; No. pats., choice' $6.50 to $6,60. Rolled Man. oats—No. ;. 1 fc No,oats—bag. oil 90 lbs., $3.20. Brari, 2, not quoted; No. 1 reed, 50?/ac, ta- 28.25 Shorts --$3025- , Middings tifeed, 4'7 .f. ; Western gr airi quota- 37.25. Hay—No: 2, per; ton, car iota, tons le c.i.f. ports. 2 ' $17 to $18. Am.” corn, tract.,' Toronto—No. heeae Finest' Wests. ,16s/ e• But - 1 ow, 94%c; No. 3 yellow, 93%c, C yellow, ter—No. 1 -pasteurized, 33c, . Eggs_ go in ed—Dol Montreal freights, Fresh extras, 37 to 38c; freeh firsts, bags .included; Bran, per ton, $27,251: eee, shorts, per ton $29.25; middlings, Oannei caws, ;$2.25; hogs, straight- $36:25; good fee.{ flourPer bagg,• $2.30. lets of good quality, $14.76, • Ont. oats -44 to 46c, f.o.b, 'chipping points Ont. need milling wheat -$1.28 to Bavarian Highlands Barley--IVlalting, 60 to 62o. $1.80 f.o.b. shipping points according Twelve Cents Buys Lodging to frorghts. in g,,, old Godfrey, a water boy, who a fetiw of the_ war canoe had started their• last Buckwheat—Nominal. o ❑ ' in. nye—No' °r 85e, d whir" -The victims watch, which was Zti g F'ixat To - his p 1 t had stopped at five mica- 60 tiles after eight, thus confirming the belief that;it was at ,approximately that hour .drat the last of the boys fell from the canoe. The recovery pf Bakewell's, body ends the quest which bile been under way here for a week. The government airplane party which has been aiding the work. here left for Sault Ste. Marie moments before the fetal eitplosi on oc jo rney on July 20 s c ce Ian. ' l our :' Fi patent, $9,.,, To - 4 by the police. is a generous one another season of ' The arrests, police say, were made close' balance between supply and .da at the request of Deputy were Commission - of manila in view, at least pont the fate er Alfred Cuddy of the Ontario Pio- ere of crops in the Southern Hemisphere vincial Pollee. Pre- is known. "As the current season tlrawe to 'While definite informat}on as to ward its close, supplies of old crop the trail leading up to the arrests wheat appear everywhere to be low, so was not given out, police say that that little in the way of carry-over they have established that Wirtz can be counted upon to augment the }pan and Goldstein were con - new crop. Comparatively }itl:la addi- netted with the transportation of the tonal wheat can be expected to cone poisoned liquor that caused the recent forward from the Southern Hemis- deaths at Oaltviide. sphere until the newt crops, are har- Other local arrests are said to be imminent. vested at the beginning of 1927. �� , ,>,n ffinglish visitor to .the city re- caused the Imperial othe dant ,40c, "Reports of damage to the new catty recollected that on his last visit est' back by two weeps the data on, Beans'—Can hand- ked SOO er P'0 es 2'.40 r buEhel. compressed` air was put in to deter- mine whether or not the tank leaked: on Thursday. "Superintendent Lal - The leak was located, and it was while Hard Lang of the life-saving 'rew an attempt to repair this was being expressed the opinion thattthe re••ov- rib.e mishap oc- erg of all eleven bodies within a week ma do that the 'ter P l -' rkab, achievement. curr•ed: cans a terra e Be-aim—It is possible to obtain lodging in the Bavarian highlands for �: AS little as 50 pfennige, .oe.12 cents, ionto; do, second pat., $ per bed and for 24 cents in modest p patent flour—Torontoebarrel, atper cent.uses in even the most popular re - 5.90; per seaboard, in bulk,cadets, Toronto, 5.90 seaboard, in $5.90. sorts. `Iii Munich itself a room can be had as low as 48 cents a night. Board Cheese—Newt -Targe, 19'� to.20c, twins, 2Ic; trip-ets, 22c. Stiltons, 24c. and lodging, can be had in almost Old, large, 28c; ,twins, 29c; triplets, every 'resort for as little as $1,20 a day, including Munich. The Hotel Butter—Finest creamery prints, am Fibs on Lake Eib, one of the with running , 35 .to 34c; No. 1 creamery, 34 to Ssc; finest hote''e in the Bavarian Alps, No. 2, 33 to 34c. Dairy prints, 26r in water, charges $3.1U a to ggs dayfor bard and lodging. ` f eshsh extras,eas, in cartons e;or do these prices ekist' merely on loose,35 to �6c• 38c; res extras, freshruse -to0 boarding 1 `.or s 29c. � paper. Any hotel. freshLfirsts, y— fresh second Live poultry—Chickene, Spring, ib., venturing to ,charge 1r}4}re than its 30e; hens, over 5 lbs,, 24e; do., 4 to 5 :listed prices would find itself imine - lbs., 24e; do., 3 to 4 lbs,, 20c; roosters, diately on the black list' of the state's 20c; ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, 30c; seine -official tourist associations, and Date m pe I1 : turkeys,' 30c.that would mean its end. . Altered to Suit Elections i Dressed pau'}try—Chi' Spring, ---o. u lb., 40c; chickens, storage, lb., 315*; London. --The holding of Federal i hells,over 6 lbs 27c do 4 Ito 61bs„ - C di t-11 City Gets 3000 Francs I? t flan r l Conf ercnce For Broken Umbrella. A broken umbrella has brought 3000 27c fronts to the city of Rouen, Prance. elections in Canada in September has i.duck:ings, 5 lbs. and up, 350; turkeys, Cull Taxes, in riilgid North do., 3 to 4 lbs., 26c• roosters 25c • I2oyai ani an oun c • an -plc p oxop have coma from va'lain parts of Gernan Invents Shutterlessth t n ten years age his auto- which the Imperial Conference is to bushel arxn, , $ ne Europe, eliminating the hope of an outturn mewl to last year, but unless unfavorable weather persietr. there is season to expect a fan average crop. nevertheless, some increase in imports may be Iooked for. 1 "Oar the export side, the July estimate gives the United States a total crop about 100;001,000 bushels greater than last year. This increase will just about ofte t.the probable de- crease in the crop of Western Europe, as indicated by condition reports so far, "The Indian crop, harvested in May, yielded practically the sante total as last year, so that no substantial con- tribution toward the world supplies can be expected from that source. With the exception of problematical 'supplies from Russia, Canada is the only other important source of wheat Lancashire has not yet heard of the imports until the crops of the South- ern Hemisphere become available in new invention and is not likely to the early t f 1927" adopt it unless its weaving skill, hand- Employment and- En 1 nt in Canada iy applicable to the new machine as to a aw . •nr:•bile in. turning to enter the Taos convene. The conference utas to have (. Maple • produce --Syrup, per Imp. -RI ,2.26 to Income tax coileations• to the amount 'of $14,588 at Herchel Island, in July Loom, Lowering the Cost, .aurae; brake a lady's umbrella. Con- opened on October 5th, but Premier glut, $2.30 to -$2.40, per 5 g , $ and August; fur tax collectionaa at sideriug himself entirely to blame, as Sten1ee Baldwin announced. in the $2.80 per gal;' maple sugar, lb., 25 to Fort Smits and Fort x coneayn to the London.—A shutt:eless 'loom, hither-, 26c; maple syrup,,new, per gal., $2.40, to regardod as aa haijassihmsy, has he had not sounded over a warning, the House of Commons that Canada s re- Honey --50-1b. tins, i1% to 12c per amount of $7;0$4.24, and total 1ense inglfslranc handed to the Mayer quest for- a all thenesixent had been 26c; 10 -1b. tins, 11% to 12c; 5 -ib. tins, saxlee of 520,511 ie. northern Alberta b ,,n't divided agreed to by ail Governments eon -I 1'to 12Se 2% -lb tins 14 to 14%e. were made by the Royal Canadioen 4 been invented by a Germnn named anon rraves. to a eq g 1 c , Mounted Police during the year ended September 30, 1925, accoseling to the report, of .Superintendent James, Ritchie - of s"0" division, with lima - quarters at Edmonton. In addition, there were 382 wolf bounty warrants issued, the ]linter receiving $80' upon Gabler, according to a report from. amang the hospitals, the pear and the Berlin, and has been already Lhar-, parmanen[17 disabled of the war. mighty tested and, proved feasible in , Even es alto ItrEaent rate 02 exchange; German factories before being public -the city of Mena finds. the sum ample ly announced. The mechanism is de-.Ibe pleat and works on slid tkre appreciation has been ex - scribed as the sirs ex - compensation for a broken umbrella two rods which carry threads and pressed by the municipal authorities. elections, weaves all kinds of cotton yarn and, -- _ _ Y� __ _� 30 lbs, and up, $22,34; lig {xtwolght his surrender of the wolf iifda jute with the sante apparatus, 4 ""— rolls in barrels, $42.50; heavyweight To asaiart the efforts of the eighty - The claim is made that production is s ,ENFORCES . x of [{,�% r COUNCIL DECISION eighty - quicker and safer, that the number �� ®Il q cerned, and it had been decided to Smoked meats—Hams, med., 84 to begin the sessions on October- 19. It 35c; cooked hams, 52 to.54c; smoked Was felt that more time should be rolls, 25e; cottage, .31 •to 32c; break allowed the Canadian Government to fast bacon, to 40c; special brand select its representatives to the con - Cured breakfast bacon, 39 to 42a, backs,' ference following the outcorneeof the ;boneless, 42. to 47c. Cured meats—Long clear bacon, e0 to '30 lbs,, $24.25; 70 to 90 lbs. $23,75; operatives is reduced, that the comply-; cated preliminary steps before wind-; ing the threads will be obviated' and the cost of the loom' construction' greatly lessened. • par•• -a ed down through generations, is equal- Now with the old we:: -tried Arkwright Now Highest Since 1920 Ottawa.—Improvement in the em- ployment situation in Canada is re- ported by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. On the payrolls of the 5,898 firms which : reported to the Dept. of Labor on July J. were 850,718 persons, or 20,699 more than in June. These additions to staff exceeded those reported on the :corresponding date of P. any previous yt*ar of the retard, and the index of employment, at 103.7, now stands higher than in any other month since 1900 1oon1. e Lar a Crops t Estllnal g 1? upon his profits from liquor in Moscow.—Russia's coming cereal 1920-21. cropsure estimated at 78,000,000 tone, The ruling of the highest tribunal compared with 59,000,000 tons last in the Empire decided a'test case filed year, according to data given out by by the Canadian Government to deter - the Central Statistics Administration. mine whether it was legal to tax pro - rolls, $39,50 -per bbl. even constables, a fleet of boats is Lard—Pure tierces, 18 to 18%s; maintained. There ,aro six motor tubs, 183h to 19c; pails, 19 to 195“; boats on the Mackenzie River, an HUGE prtnts, 20% •to 21c; shortening, tierces, hoxt auxiliary schooner on the Great ver, loan � � INCOME TA �N LIQUOR ADE 14% to15 tubs, 15 to 153ac• pails 16 to 161/2c; t be s,. Heavy :steers chorco, $7.86 to $8.35; bats,, most oP,which are. kept on the Windsor,—Liquor dealers here 'who technically describe themselves as "ex- porters" were staggered after they had digested the full import of Privy Council decision in the now famous Cecil Smith case, by terms of which Smith, one of the border's most suc- cessful bootleggers, must pay to .the, Federal Government $28,630 as tax, fits made from liquor sales. Work is the most enjoyable of the According to local barristers who canrman-activrti'es of ellankind,.—Rob-. have fo=lovted c_ase:y the progress of ere Lynd. , the case through " various courts, James Cooper of Walkervllde, who is do., good, ' $7.40 to $7.76; butcher waist of the Arctic rated as worth more than the average steers; choice, $7.40 to $7,85; do., millionaire, and whose operations goad -$7 to $7.25; do:, comrironr $5.50 • along is $6,50; butcher heifers, 'choice, v � eYSOnS , in Jap. Floods hand overto the Government approxi- cher cows, choice, $5.5 $ ,P mately $600,000 in income tax, repie- fair to good,. $4. to $o; botcher bulls, good, $5,50 to $b; Iwlognas, Tokio.—More than 100 persons were senting his profits during the 1920-21 MEI to- $4' canners and , cutters, peeled. Cooper'lives in a. magnificent killed, and 5,000 houses were washed mansion in Walkerville and contri- $2.5D'to $n l rrs °chofceoh �96 to. 5115, away in the Niigata prefecture, when $95;sprs ge , $ were the most extensive o£ any Sx h 7 led, 5,000 the border here, will . be compelled to to $7.75; do., good, 56.75 to :7; but - 0 to 7do, Houses - 0; blocks, 17 to 17x60 ' baric and five Columbia River fishing Gone butes generously to public charities medium cows, $45 to. $00; feeders, of all sorts. I good, $11.25 to. $6.75; do., fan, $5 to the rivers in the northwestern part of vain Island went on a rampage. Fifty, bridges are down and telegraph, rail- road And telephone service sdis- rupted. is- ru ted. The; villages of Tochiocho, .Ams - To Have -Wheat .Pool Like Canada. of ad- vising , the Edmonton—Fol purpose , Australian wheat. growers , on the formation of a wheat poo1,repre- sentative members of the Canadian Wheat Pod will; leave' shortly for . Australiai, The members of the party will lilsd visit the Orient to study market conditions there, They will be away for :four months. The Canadian Wheat Pool, with its: three laths in the Piroviuces of Mani- toba, Saskatchewan. and Alberta, was established about three years 'ago and to -day is: the largest co-oper'ative organization of its kind in the world. - 'l'he membership totals over 125,000 actual farmers in Western Canada, controlling about 14,000,000 of the 21,- 000,000 acres sown to wheat in . the three Prairie Provinces. The Can- adian Wheat Pool handles• the save (ti- the greater part of the wheat produc- tion of Canada. The ;Dominion ex- ports more wheat than any oth r-cnun- try in the world and produces the world's sedeed largest crop. Most of the wheat pxodtced by the members of the Canadian Whent'Pool is sold by a central selling agency or the pool to importers and buyers in- different countries of the.wor;d far The' agency has direct, sellipg canner - tions with every wheat importing country and has its own represents tives:in 51 ports of the world,: The funds which accrue from the sales are disbursed to the members•of. the three provincial pools. The :-'Wheat Pool in 'Western C re- ada is a notable example of the ad- vancement made by the `farmers or the 'Canadian 'Vest. 'Already it has shown the possibilities and advantages . of coeaperative,marketing. In the poo. system the farmer delivers his gr are. According to a list of Exporters wile y $6; calves, to t choice, $10.50 to. $12; y h i i d' when convenient and obtains the ate' - are said to have made large sums and do, good, la to $10; 50 dight, $5 to fee of the se?ing period, toc:e!;- who will be assessed by the Govern- $6S good lambs, $1G.50 to $17; do,' agePl is to 16' do,-bndcs,.$13.5'O to p er with the saving in tale handling loci, $ Y.ing o every gsee merit for a large share of their earn- p, gashita Iiigashidai, l�xgoromura„ $14; good light slice 156 to $7.50; _ • r costs. Tho pool price` William, logs—the names being on the in the heavy sheep and bucks, $4. to $0.50; 'Tochiehobori anti Senjo are search_ ter is the price at Fort, aver - Dept Finance at Ottawa pending hors 'thick smooths, fed and watered, for des afokalat the head of the great lakes, lees outcome of the Smith case—the tots: '13a0 do, f.i.b„ $13; do county ing the debris d, .Nag $' and Ai7u are still in danger: handling charges and'. freight .harries; will be far in excess of $1,000,000. 1p•nts' $12 75; do, ori cars, $14; ,do, Th latter, of course vary according The _.-..w.... ._ It Was a Perfect Image of M. MUTT AND JEFF—By Pend Fisher. m CAN`T BGLieue ar' SecAuse .1EFE prromAge. -ro l;r R r viz) A ScAlzC•GCe'ow MC- 118'I teo2avlNG, - doter reel sae saame`J Aeen tie TELLS MC Mama ARE A LOT OF CROW • TIACI tear ae level" S RENTC-b HFRF 'l NC AR LOAr00M! l3ut. "tele Clowe a A LATER Aeat. TtlAT eEA[ s lust F12a6;-1:* Gb)'Nc'. TH6'rn AUTA`t e. tett. , to the length of the haul. Travels 14,000 Miles to See 'Bels Nevis Dawn London.—Among the pilgrims to see the sunrise on Tuesday at the minima of Ben Nevis, Scotland's highest mountain, was a .West Australian who had travelled, 14,000 miles Ser this sight. It was his first visit to Stot- land'since he left there thirty years ago.:. He Made a vow .to return to Scotland and welcome the cla.vn on Ben Nevis. He 10 now a prosperous rancher. Mountaineering pilgrim; with him at the time numbered more than 500 and included Americans, Japanese, South Africans, French, Dutch and Swiss, as well as .B'ritishers from all parts of the Isles.. Mrs. Baldwin' Was Crlckotar. ' Io her earlier daye Mrs. Soulier Baldwin, wife of the British-, prime ]sinister, wee a rather celebrated 'cric- ket pla,yei•, and used to play with the White Heather club, comPoe04 entire' J.43' of ampere uremheri.